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JPMorgan — The bank slipped 2.4% despite beating expectations on both lines and reporting lower credit costs than anticipated. Wells Fargo — Wells Fargo shares vacillated after reporting first-quarter earnings , but were recently up less than 1%. The bank topped Wall Street's expectations on the top and bottom lines, but reported a decline in net interest income. Citigroup — Shares rose more than 2% after the bank posted $21.1 billion in revenue , which was higher than analysts' expectations of $20.4 billion, according to LSEG. Globe Life — The insurer jumped about 9% in Friday's extended trading, rebounding after tumbling more than 50% in the prior session.
Persons: Jamie Dimon, LSEG, Thursday's, Raymond James, , Macheel, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: JPMorgan, Citigroup —, BlackRock, Blackrock, Research, Paramount, Skydance, Wolfe Research, Corteva, Citi Locations: Wells, LSEG
Wells Fargo — Shares of the bank inched lower by less than 1% after it reported a decline in net interest income during the first quarter. Wells Fargo did beat analyst expectations for its first-quarter adjusted earnings and revenue. Globe Life — The life insurance stock bounced 10% after plummeting more than 50% during Thursday's session. The firm said shares were not worth purchasing ahead of the first quarter earnings report, given the weakness expected. Ciena — Shares slipped nearly 3% after Citi initiated coverage of the software company with a sell rating.
Persons: Jamie Dimon, Wells, LSEG, Corteva, Librela, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Tanaya Macheel, Pia Singh Organizations: JPMorgan, Street, Wells Fargo, BlackRock —, BlackRock, Fuzzy Panda Research, Paramount, Skydance Media, Citi, Wall Street, Solensia, Arista Networks, Rosenblatt
In 2015, Nelson Peltz's Trian Partners was defeated in an activist campaign against chemical firm DuPont , largely because the top three institutional shareholders voted against his slate. Nearly a decade later, those same institutional investors — Vanguard, State Street and BlackRock — are the three largest shareholders in Disney . Former Marvel chairman Ike Perlmutter has entrusted Peltz with his 33 million Disney shares, the bulk of the activist's 1.8% stake. Vanguard is the largest holder with 8% of outstanding Disney shares. In 2021, for example, 63% of Disney shareholders voted their shares, according to data analyzed by 13D Monitor.
Persons: Nelson Peltz's Trian, Bob Iger, Rowe Price, CNBC they're, Trian, Ike Perlmutter, Peltz, Neuberger Berman, Jones, Ken Squire, Squire, Innisfree, King Organizations: Nelson Peltz's Trian Partners, DuPont, — Vanguard, State Street, BlackRock, Disney, Wall Street, CNBC, Vanguard, State, Marvel, Trian Partners, 13D, Okapi Partners Locations: BlackRock, New York, California
"We estimate Bitcoin custody and surveillance revenue will more than offset decline in Bitcoin trading volume as assets migrate to ETFs," the analysts said. "Spot bitcoin ETFs appear poised to take volume away from crypto exchanges," said Bryan Armour, director of passive strategies research for North America at Morningstar. watch nowMizuho sees the income from custody fees as fairly modest given how far investors have pushed up the stock. "They are essential infrastructure in terms of custody, trading, and surveillance for the majority of the ETF proposals," Carter said. WATCH: Former SEC Chair Jay Clayton on changes in bitcoin trading
Persons: Brian Armstrong, Michael Nagle, Coinbase, Franklin Templeton, they'll, Bernstein, bitcoin, Emilie Choi, , Mizuho, Bryan Armour, Choi, we've, Nic Carter, Carter, Jay Clayton Organizations: Coinbase Global Inc, Bloomberg, Getty, SEC, Coinbase, BlackRock, JPMorgan, Mizuho, FactSet, Circle's U.S, CNBC, North America, Morningstar, Fidelity, Castle, Ventures Locations: New York, BlackRock, Coinbase, bitcoin
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell: UnitedHealth — The largest health insurer by revenue rose more than 1% after beating analysts' third-quarter expectations. BlackRock — BlackRock fell by 1.8% premarket after missing third-quarter revenue forecasts. Wells Fargo — Wells Fargo added nearly 2% after third-quarter earnings and revenue topped expectations . Citigroup — Citigroup was higher by 2% after beating third-quarter revenue expectations. The Jane Fraser-led bank reported revenue of $20.14 billion, more than the consensus estimate of $19.31 billion from LSEG.
Persons: LSEG, BlackRock —, Gordon Haskett, Wells, Jane Fraser, Morgan Stanley, Tanaya Macheel Organizations: Dow Jones, BlackRock, BlackRock — BlackRock, Blackrock, PNC Financial Services Group, Pittsburgh, PNC, Revenue, LSEG, JPMorgan Chase &, Citigroup — Citigroup, Post Holdings, JPMorgan Locations: LSEG, Wells, Louis
For years, Larry Fink, the chief executive of the giant asset manager BlackRock, has been broadcasting a message to corporate America: Environmental, social and governance goals should be core to how companies do business. So when BlackRock announced in July that it would appoint Amin Nasser, the head of the world’s largest oil company, Aramco, to its board, investors and politicians immediately called out Mr. Fink on what they said was his hypocrisy. It’s the latest example of the increasingly difficult situation Mr. Fink finds himself in: His championing of E.S.G. has drawn accusations of “woke” capitalism from the right while his embrace of energy companies has upset those on the left. The political blowback has made it more challenging for Mr. Fink to do his day job of finding new sources of money that BlackRock — which oversees $9 trillion in assets — needs to drive growth and keep shareholders happy.
Persons: Larry Fink, Amin Nasser, Fink, , Giuseppe Bivona, Fink’s, Organizations: BlackRock, Aramco, Bluebell Locations: America, London
JPMorgan Chase — Shares fell slightly even after the bank reported stronger-than-expected results for the second quarter, as it benefited from higher interest rates and better-than-expected bond trading. Wells Fargo — Wells Fargo shares rose slightly after the Wall Street firm topped second-quarter expectations. The Wall Street firm also said AT&T's exposure to cable may limit the upside for shares. Alcoa — The aluminum stock fell 4.9% following a downgrade to neutral from overweight by JPMorgan. Eli Lilly — The pharmaceutical stock rose 3% in midday trading.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Wells, UnitedHealth, Eli Lilly, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: JPMorgan, JPMorgan Chase —, Elevance, Citigroup —, JetBlue Airways, American Airlines — JetBlue Airways, American Airlines, Microsoft, UBS, Blackrock —, Alcoa, Progressive Locations: Wells, York
What's next for BlackRock?
  + stars: | 2023-06-19 | by ( Dan Defrancesco | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +4 min
The biggest, and most obvious, change comes at the top, as BlackRock considers life without Larry Fink. The departure of Fink from BlackRock — a firm he's led since founding it with Robert Kapito in 1988 — is monumental in and of itself. But consider the state of affairs:Simply put, there's a lot going on these days at BlackRock. Insider's Rebecca Ungarino, our resident BlackRock expert, has a rundown of all the latest news at the massive money manager. More on everything that's happening at BlackRock as its CEO and cofounder considers his future.
Persons: Dan DeFrancesco, we've, Leonardo Munoz, don't, Larry Fink, Fink, Robert Kapito, Insider's Rebecca Ungarino, Todd Anderson, Christine McCarthy, Bob Iger, Iger, Gen, Jeffrey Cane, Hallam Bullock Organizations: Disney, Netflix, BlackRock, Getty, Barclays, Goldman, Mouse, Apple's, McKinsey, LinkedIn Locations: VIEWpress, BlackRock —, BlackRock, Hulu, London, New York
For the week, bitcoin is on track to end just below the flatline, while ether is heading for a 6% loss. Bitcoin was last higher by 4% at $26,419.53, according to CoinMetrics, while ether advanced 3% to $1,718.06. After the bell Thursday, BlackRock — the largest asset manager in the world — filed for spot bitcoin ETF, with Coinbase as its crypto custodian. It's been about 10 years since the first filing for a potential spot bitcoin ETF. The filing comes about a week after the SEC sued its crypto custody partner, Coinbase, for violating securities laws, leaving many questioning the timing of BlackRock's application.
Persons: bitcoin, litecoin, Bitcoin, Gustavo Schwenkler, It's, Mark Connors Organizations: Solana, U.S . Investors, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, BlackRock, Coinbase, Leavey School of Business, Santa Clara University, SEC Locations: U.S
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink took a 30% pay cut last year, pocketing a total of $25.2 million. Apple's Tim Cook, Goldman Sach's David Solomon, and Google's Sundar Pichai are other CEOs taking pay cuts. Fink — who co-founded BlackRock in 1988 — made $36 million in 2021. While Fink's pay — before and after his 2022 pay cut — is still quite significant, it's far from the top of the CEO pay scale in the US. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy's pay dropped to $1.3 million in 2022 from $212.7 million in 2021, Insider reported Friday.
JPMorgan Chase reported revenue of $39.34 billion, beating the $36.19 billion estimates for analyst polled by Refinitiv. Wells Fargo — The bank added 3.1% after beating Wall Street expectations when reporting earnings. The company reported revenue at $20.73 billion, which is higher than the $20.08 expected by Wall Street. PNC — Shares rose 1.3% after the bank reported first-quarter earnings. UnitedHealth – UnitedHealth shares rose slightly after the health insurance provider beat Wall Street's estimates on the top and bottom lines and lifted its profit outlook for 2023.
But first, dark days on Wall Street. Two of the most high-profile firms on Wall Street — Goldman Sachs and BlackRock — made job cuts that impacted thousands of workers. All of that is to say, after a good run of things on Wall Street, the tide is starting to turn. I called a Wall Street recruiter to pick their brain on advice they'd give to those who just lost their jobs. Wall Street did not have a good showing on a list of the best places to work.
Larry Fink, Chairman and C.E.O. of BlackRock arrives at the DealBook Summit in New York City, November 30, 2022. David Dee Delgado | ReutersLONDON — BlackRock CEO Larry Fink is facing calls to step down from activist investor Bluebell Capital over the company's alleged "hypocrisy" on its environmental, social and governance (ESG) messaging. However, in a letter to Fink dated Nov. 10, shareholder Bluebell expressed concern about the "reputational risk (including greenwashing risk) to which BlackRock under the leadership of Larry Fink have unreasonably exposed the company." The company remains a major shareholder in the likes of Glencore and "coal intensive miners" Exxaro, Peabody and Whitehaven, Bivaro's letter to Fink on Nov. 10 noted.
A group of employees at the firm organized and started holding a forum to discuss crypto, five people familiar with the group told Insider. Eager, usually more junior, staff members huddled around to hear industry experts talk about crypto and blockchain. A junior employee touched off BlackRock's crypto effortsThe blockchain working group and the informal crypto-asset forum will end up being key footnotes in the firm's history. Leaving BlackRock for cryptoLader left BlackRock in June 2021 for Uniswap, the world's largest decentralized-exchange protocol, where she is now the chief operating officer. She was "very, very central" to the firm's crypto efforts," a former employee said.
After BlackRock acquired private credit firm Tennenbaum Capital Partners, more than a dozen employees left the small investment team. Former BlackRock employees say underwhelming pay and unfulfilled promises that the team could raise its own special situations fund led to widespread frustration and departures. The departures come as BlackRock aims to compete more aggressively in private credit, a key part of its high-priority alternatives push. Still, in recent years management has made it clear that its private investment capabilities need to be an important engine of growth. "It's not to say that the private credit market is easy to manage talent.
According to Tony DeSpirito, inflation and recession risks are the biggest threats to stocks. According to Tony DeSpirito, investors today face a two-pronged set of major risks to their portfolios: inflation and recession. The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE) offers diversified exposure to energy stocks, while the Vanguard Financials ETF (VFH) offers exposure to the financials sector. According to BlackRock's Ben Bei, a product strategist on the firm's Active Equity Group, healthcare stocks have performed well in prior recessions. Alongside healthcare, DeSpirito recommended keeping some cash on the sidelines as markets continue to digest inflation and the risk of monetary tightening.
A central role for boards is a critical component of ESG standards, an EY executive told Insider. This article is part of the "Financing a Sustainable Future" series exploring how companies take steps to set and fund sustainable goals. In the evolving field of environmental, social, and governance, or ESG, governance is perhaps the most critical pillar for setting and executing sustainability objectives. But governance can also be abstract, compared with sustainability metrics like carbon emissions or data measuring a company's diversity. Environmental issues and corporate governance often intersect at the top.
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